Trump’s Border Wall. The Military Can’t Build Why He Keeps Insisting It Can

But Trump wouldn’t hear it, according to two Administration officials. In Trump’s mind, Congress gave the money to the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis works for Trump, and Trump sees the wall as part of the United States’ defense. Ergo, he wants the Pentagon to build that wall. What was the point of being Commander-in-Chief — with a defense budget he boasts is “historic” — if Trump couldn’t make the military do his bidding?

White House aides told Trump that the budget he reluctantly endorsed wasn’t as flexible as budgets inside the Trump Organization. Congress explicitly forbade spending on a concrete barrier or in natural areas. Of the $1.6 billion allocated for border security — a far cry from the $25 billion Trump’s team sought as a starting point — most of it is for repairing existing fencing and conducting surveillance. When officials tried to explain to the President that the spending bill had no provisions for a military wall, Trump, in frustration, again blamed the filibuster for standing in his way, wrongly assuming fellow Republicans would go along with his desire to scrap it.

Trump has been stewing in recent days. The confluence of events — women speaking out about inappropriate ways they say Trump behaved, legal questions about payments made to these women and conservative backlashto his budget — left the President in a funk. Trump has told friends he feels let down by aides who didn’t do more on the wall, a major promise of his campaign.

Inside the White House, those aides aggressively dismiss the criticism and defend their work. They note that Democrats offered $25 billion for wall funding in exchange for a fix on young people who came to the country illegally, including a pathway to citizenship—which the White House rejected. These White House aides also note there was little appetite for the wall among Republican leadership, including House Speaker Paul Ryan, who last week largely ignored Trump’s pleas for a military-funded wall during a meeting. This, too, Trump didn’t appear grasp. (The Washington Post first reported details of Trump’s meeting with Ryan.)

During his campaign Trump promised at every rally that he would build a wall and Mexico would foot the bill. Mexico has made plain that they won’t be picking up the tab, and the Republican-led Congress is no more willing to forego home-district projects to pay for a wall.